Canadian man remembers jamming with David Bowie as an 11-year-old kid

TORONTO – When Seth Scholes walked backstage to meet David Bowie nearly 30 years ago, the 11-year-old saxophone player from Kingston, Ont., was hardly aware of how the encounter would help shape his life.

It was a chance meeting with one of music’s biggest icons, spurred on by a story about the pre-teen in the local newspaper.

When he thinks about the Aug. 24, 1987 encounter, he remembers how Bowie was “really cool, in the sense that he wasn’t intimidating at all.”

“He was just really sincere, easy to talk to and seemed genuinely interested in me,” Scholes said in a phone interview on Monday.

Scholes was first discovered when a local reporter spotted him playing saxophone on a sidewalk in Kingston, where street performers were a rarity.

His youthful ambition was enough to merit a short news story; he said he was raising money to buy a ticket to one of Bowie’s concerts.

The piece was picked up by The Canadian Press newswire and distributed across the country.

Somewhere along the line, Bowie’s representatives caught word of Scholes’s aspirations and offered his family passes to the singer’s Toronto concert. And the boy would get to meet Bowie backstage.

“He asked me all sorts of questions and his sax player came out and taught me a few lines of ‘Young Americans.’ I played the best I could for him. He was pretty forgiving,” Scholes recalled.

“He was asking what kind of music I liked listening to. I asked him what he was listening to and he told me the Sex Pistols and he told me I should check them out.”